Bogdan Wnętrzewski


Bogdan Wnętrzewski (born December 2, 1919 in Kielce, died September 11, 2007) is a Polish architect, one of the first prisoners of the Auschwitz Concentration camp in Germany (camp number 40).

He graduated from the grammar school in Przemysl and the State School of Building in Jarosław, where he graduated in 1938, then went to study at the Lviv Polytechnic, which he did not start due to the outbreak of war in September 1939.

Arrested on May 7, 1940 in Radymno near Jarosław by the Gestapo and the Ukrainians, he was initially detained in Tarnów prison, and on June 14 of that year he was deported with the first transport of prisoners to the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp. He received the No. 40 in the camp. He worked in the SS camp kitchen. In December 1944, he was transported to KL Dachau concentration camp, where he received camp number 134428. A slaughterhouse worker. After the liberation of the camp, the Americans returned to Poland.

Graduate of the Faculty of Architecture at the Warsaw University of Technology in 1950, in the same year he became a member of the SARP. He worked in the Capital Rebuilding Office and Mostostal. In the years 1962-1976 he worked as an engineer in Ghana. The creator and co-creator of many industrial objects, as well as adaptation, extension and reconstruction of existing ones. He pleaded with the former Soviet release of Esesmana Adolf Prem, who served in the Auschwitz camp as Commander of the Brotdmagazin (food magazine for the SS) and was a decent man according to Wałyrzewski.

He was buried on September 18, 2007 at the Evangelical-Augsburg Cemetery in Warsaw. Bibliography

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